Imperial America, Which
Never Left, Is Back
by Sheldon Richman Posted on February 08, 2021
https://original.antiwar.com/srichman/2021/02/07/imperial-america-which-never-left-is-back/
In a cliché-ridden
foreign-policy speech delivered at the State Department on Thursday, President
Joe Biden declared that "America is back" – on the global stage,
presumably, as policeman of the world, but certainly not a disinterested
policeman. The problem is that it never left.
Despite some uncouth
rhetoric and regular New York Times headlines regarding
"American isolationism," Donald Trump never withdrew the U.S.
government from its meddling role in the world. He baited Russia, China, Iran,
Cuba, and Venezuela, and ended no war or US assistance to other wars. Far from
leaving NATO or punishing its members for not paying more for their military
forces, he oversaw its expansion – which had only one purpose: to aggravate
Russia. Yes, Trump apparently removed some troops from Germany – does anyone
have a good reason why they are still there? – but Biden promised to change
that. He also wants to add Georgia and Ukraine to NATO, which of course – wink –
would never make Russia nervous.
If that’s what he means by
"America is back," lets us shout in unison: Thanks, but no thanks!
Not that we should be
surprised by Biden’s position, considering that his foreign-policy team
consists of Obama administration retreads who act as though there’s a world of
difference between intervention and humanitarian intervention.
Biden put Russia and China
on notice: "The days of the United States rolling over in the face of
Russia’s aggressive actions – interfering with our elections, cyberattacks,
poisoning its citizens – are over."
Hang on. We’ve never been
given evidence that Russia, which has a weak economy and limited military,
interfered with an election – quite the contrary – or engaged in cyberattacks.
By the way, we know the US government does that sort of thing routinely, even
with respect to Russia and its allies. Moreover, if Vladimir Putin’s government
poisons its citizens – obviously something to be condemned by all decent people
– how is that aggressive action against the United States or any
other country? By that curious standard, US persecution of Chelsea Manning,
Julian Assange, Edward Snowden, John Kiriakou, et al. could be construed as
aggression against others.
I will give Biden credit
for agreeing with Russia to extend the New START Treaty on nuclear weapons.
(Putin’s so-called puppet, Trump, pulled out of such treaties.)
And on China:
And we’ll also take on
directly the challenges posed by our prosperity, security, and democratic
values by our most serious competitor, China. We’ll confront China’s economic
abuses; counter its aggressive, coercive action; to push back on China’s attack
on human rights, intellectual property, and global governance.
Note the words: "Our
most serious competitor." One way to reduce tensions among states is to
stop seeing them as competing for economic entities. America doesn’t compete with
China in the global marketplace because America is not a homogeneous entity
with a single scale of preferences. An American consumer and a Chinese merchant
may have a harmony of interest; likewise an American manufacturer and a Chinese
consumer or producer. (Concerns about intellectual property can be taken care
of by repealing the relevant laws. Ideas cannot legitimately be owned.) But
Biden, like Trump, is locked into the mercantilist worldview in which nations
compete against each other. That’s why Biden promises to reinforce the
"Buy American" policy, costing taxpayers more for stuff that the U.S.
government could buy for less from foreign manufacturers. "Buy
American" also distorts the international division of labor, making
everyone less prosperous.
Regarding Biden’s other
charges against China, one need not approve of the oppressive Chinese
government to understand that something is wrong when no government but the US
government is allowed to have a sphere of influence ("backyard"),
which thereby extends to the whole world. In a world of states, that sort of policy is asking for trouble.
So Biden’s speech wholeheartedly
embraced America’s role as the global overseer, self-appointed to keep everyone
on good behavior, strangely alternating between invocations of altruism and
"naked [national] self-interest." We know where that took us in the
past.
Biden promised to end
assistance to Saudi Arabia’s "offensive" actions in Yemen. Fine. But
how will he define "offensive"? We might have a clue in what Biden
said right after this promise:
At the same time, Saudi
Arabia faces missile attacks, UAV strikes, and other threats from
Iranian-supplied forces in multiple countries. We’re going to continue to
support and help Saudi Arabia defend its sovereignty and its territorial
integrity and its people.
Bear in mind that the Saudi
regime is one of the most repressive in the world.
So nothing will really
change. If Biden wanted to make a constructive difference to that region, he
would end the long-standing multi-front covert/overt war against Iran,
including all the sanctions Trump imposed. Biden didn’t otherwise mention Iran
in the speech, yet he says he wants to reenter the nuclear deal, which Trump
stormed out of. The way to do that is to end the sanctions, which harm and even
kill innocent people.
While we’re talking about
the Middle East, let us note that Biden said nothing about Israel and
Palestine, despite all the damage Trump did there on behalf of the Israeli
state and against the long-suffering Palestinians. We already know from his
Senate confirmation hearing that Secretary of State Tony Blinken has no problem
with what Trump did: from moving the embassy to Jerusalem to declaring the
settlements in the de facto annexed West Bank just fine and dandy. Massive
annual military aid to Israel – without any conditions whatever – of course
will continue. That policy of course gives propaganda opportunities to other
regimes that the US government can then condemn as destabilizing. But which
party is the real destabilizer?
Also among the no-mentions
was Afghanistan. How can Biden give his first speech on foreign policy without
discussing the country’s longest war? That is really remarkable. The names Iraq
and Syria also do not appear in the speech. Amazing.
As long as government
exists, the proper foreign policy is the nonintervention. Policing the world
inevitably invites defensive and deterrent responses, which are then used as
pretenses to counter so-called "aggressive" actions. It also makes
fortunes for military contractors. The result is perpetual war in which liberty
and prosperity must suffer.
Sheldon Richman is the executive
editor of The Libertarian Institute, senior fellow and chair
of the trustees of the Center for a Stateless Society, and a contributing editor
at Antiwar.com. He is the former senior
editor at the Cato Institute and Institute for Humane Studies, former editor of The Freeman,
published by the Foundation for Economic Education, and former vice president
at the Future of Freedom
Foundation. His latest book is What Social Animals
Owe to Each Other.
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